Brooklyn native Kedar Edwards picked up an offer from South Carolina on Friday after an exceptional two days at the Reebok Breakout Challenge.Joseph Staszewski

PHILADELPHIA – Kedar Edwards has been to three high schools in three different states. Now he’s in search of something a little steadier: a four-year college.

The Brooklyn native and former Wingate star has impressed this week at the Reebok Breakout Challenge. In three games with the Friars squad, he’s averaging 20 points. He came back after a thumb and wrist injury Thursday to drop in 24 points and grab nine rebounds against the JWalls team Friday night at Philadelphia University. Edwards was a pest in that game, a blowout loss, busting it until the final buzzer, getting putbacks and playing tenacious defense.

“I play hard, because nobody really knows who I am,” he said. “I came to this camp not to make friends. You can like me or not. I don’t care.”

Edwards left Wingate for that very reason. He averaged 18.4 points per game as a sophomore and got no recognition. The 6-foot-4 guard left the city for Coatesville (Pa.) HS, where he stayed with a close friend. Last winter, though, he transferred to West Oaks Academy in Orlando, Fla., and he reclassified to the Class of 2012. Tulsa was among his main suitors, though Edwards said he had no offers – at least before this week.

Dana Dingle, his coach with the Long Island Lightning, told The Post that Edwards picked up offers from South Carolina and Manhattan on Friday and he also has interest from Rutgers and a number of others.

“He’s gonna get a ton of offers,” Dingle said. “He’s a sleeper right now, but he’s only going to blow up.”

Because of his size and the level of play then, the super-athletic Edwards played power forward at Wingate, hence his relentless rebounding. But since then he has focused more on his perimeter game, and his ball handling and shooting have actually become strengths – impressive for a player who only started playing AAU last year with the Lightning.

“From a maturation standpoint, his game has evolved tremendously,” said Orville Boswell, the father of Lightning teammate Jason Boswell and a close confidante. … “I’m not a psychic, but however I think the kid has unlimited potential. He’s coming into his own.”

Dingle calls Edwards an old-school New York City player, one who does a little bit of everything and just has a nose for the ball and the basket.

“He just finds ways to score,” the coach said.

Edwards is a relative neophyte at this competitive level, averaging just three points per contest coming off the bench as a freshman at Wingate. He would like a Division I scholarship though – whatever the level – which certainly seems in the cards.

“I’m not looking for a big-name school,” Edwards said. “Wherever I go I want to play. I want a guaranteed spot.”

He’s working hard with that goal in mind. Edwards had five steals against the JWalls, sticking to his defender like glue. There might have only been a smattering of coaches left in the stands Friday night, but that didn’t matter.

“He has that battery – he keeps going and going,” Dingle said. “There aren’t many kids like that in the country.”